"I saw Brock made millions for this fight, more than anyone ever," he initially told markhunt.tv.

"I wanna know what they are gonna do to Brock now. When you don't make weight they give twenty per cent of your purse to the other fighter. If you get caught cheating you should lose all of it."

"I've told (UFC President Dana White) I want half of Brock's purse."

After the first anti-doping violation, Lesnar provided a short statement to the AP, claiming, "We will get to the bottom of this."

The substance for which Lesnar tested positive was not disclosed, per USADA policy, and will not be, unless the fighter discloses it, until the process is concluded.

Lesnar won his fight with Hunt via unanimous decision with three of the judges scoring the fight to Lesnar 29-27, after he repeatedly took Hunt to the canvas with a ground and pound offence.

The UFC released a statement on the second doping positive, saying they were investigating the matter.

"The UFC organisation was notified today that the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) has informed Brock Lesnar that his in-competition sample collection from July 9, 2016, at UFC 200, has tested positive for the same substance as his previously announced out-of-competition collection on June 28, 2016," the statement read.

"USADA, the independent administrator of the UFC Anti-Doping Policy, will handle the results management and appropriate adjudication of this case."